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this post was submitted on 27 Jul 2024
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Even without Steam around, do you really think Average Joe is going to check a bunch of storefronts looking for a game? Nah, they're going to see what comes up on Twitch/YouTube and then play that. That would have meant nothing but sponsored garbage forever. Steam saved us from that fate with Greenlight and later opening the door entirely (and favouring indies in their upcoming and new lists)
Do you remember Direct2Drive? Opened up in 2004, digital storefront for games run by IGN? No? That's ok, neither does anyone else, and it had the pull of fucking IGN. That's the market Steam was launching into at the time, a time when many people were openly exclaiming PC gaming was dying.
At the time gamer chat was a mostly text-based affair over several places and services, and voice was the realm of the few people with the skills to get TeamSpeak/Ventrilo/Mumble going or a connection to those people. Steam did something wild and brought the whole community together in one place. All the games, all the gamers, and all the developers in one place.
That's how Steam ended up a monopoly, and with their collection of mature services no one is going to beat them at everything. If you want to beat them you're going to need to focus on one aspect of their service, beat that, and then work with other people who have targeted other parts of the service and connect. In other words, you need to do the exact opposite of Battle.net/Epic/Uplay/Origin/etc. but none of those companies will do that because they are too selfish to give up any part of the profits.
Only the FOSS community would have the required mentality and why would they step on Steam? Linux gaming has never been this good. It's almost like the only people who could take on Steam view it as an asset.
Oh and just to be clear: virtually no other service has even tried to do anything but be a worse version of Steam. GOG and Itch.io instead opted to focus on what made them different and thus occupy meaningful niches, but everyone else continues to be worthless to this day and they only have themselves to blame.
Or games could be in multiple stores.
You could go to a game store... and it would have... all of the games.
Like a real-ass brick-and-mortar store, and physical glass-disc games in little plastic boxes.
Valve has not been an obstacle to that possibility, but Steam's 30% cut says they don't mind de facto exclusivity. They're not charging you like they're abusing their monopoly... but they're charging game developers the same as bastards like Nintendo and Apple.
The article is entirely about how that monopoly holds back the industry. There is one store. You're on it, or you're fucked. And getting there requires sacrificing an entire third of revenue, straight off the top. For obvious reasons developers and publishers would rather not do that. Valve has them by the balls - and a gentle grip doesn't really defuse that situation.